Jump to content
Michele and Adam

Yes, you can visit!

 Share

2,488 posts in this topic

Recommended Posts

I just came back from a visit to my fiance and wanted to share my experience. I flew to Seattle, where I have previously had some pretty serious grilling.

The officer made some small talk and was in good spirits. He asked why I was visiting and I said I was visiting my fiance.

"Oh, you are?"

"Yes. We're not getting married, we're waiting for our K1 visa."

"What does your fiance do?"

"He's a farrier."

"That's unusual. Welcome to the United States."

He didn't even ask how long I was staying! I had loads of documentation with me to back up my ties to the UK, but this was literally the quickest and easiest entry to the US I've ever done!

English girl . American cowboy. "Like a western Dirty Dancing."


my rambling blog: cowboysgirlfriend.com


20 May 2014: Filed our I129f

10 September 2014: Visa in hand!


8 January 2015: Filed for AoS (EAD & AP)

15 January 2015: NOA1

5 February 2015: Biometrics

9 February 2015: RFE

10 February 2015: Evidence filed

19 February 2015: USCIS acknowledged evidence received

3 March 2015: EAD and AP approved! Card ordered!

6 March 2015: USCIS updated: ready for interview scheduling

28 September 2015: Interview - APPROVED!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi everyone! My fiancé just came to visit today from South Africa through JFK, NY and I wanted to share our experience! We are currently (anxiously) waiting for approval :)!

This is great! Being able to visit and spend time with one another is so crucial during the waiting process, it can totally renew a relationship. I've seen plenty of stories in this thread about people from Western Europe and Canada being given tourist visas, but I've been hesitant to see if I can do the same because my fiancée holds a Bosnian passport, despite living in Germany. I'd feared that they'd be biased and send her back at JFK.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

This is great! Being able to visit and spend time with one another is so crucial during the waiting process, it can totally renew a relationship. I've seen plenty of stories in this thread about people from Western Europe and Canada being given tourist visas, but I've been hesitant to see if I can do the same because my fiancée holds a Bosnian passport, despite living in Germany. I'd feared that they'd be biased and send her back at JFK.

Hi idriss, I am from Bosnia, and I got my tourist visa without any problems. Your fiance just needs to make an appointment at US embassy, and bring as much ties to Germany as she can, and it shouldn't be a problem. I know a lot Bosnian people resigning in Germany that got B1/2 visa.

I went to NY in May and I had no problems at JFK, but it was before we started K1 process. I am planing to go again next week (if I manage to get days off from work) and I am really nervous, because I'm scared they will bias me because of K1 in process. I will share my experience after I get there.

Good luck

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline

Second time entering the United States since starting K-1. I entered in Edmonton, AB Canada (Same as first)

This time, I was going to a concert in Chicago, traveling with a friend and meeting my fiance there.

I was asked purpose of my visit: - Going to a concert in Chicago

Have a good time.

Makes me wonder if they even keep anything on your history of going across the border.... Or maybe they just get that there should be no alarm in visiting the US while awaiting a visa approval..

Either way, no grilling which was nice!

--------------------------

K-1 Visa Timeline

--------------------------

04/21/2014: Submitted I-129F

05/29/2014: NOA2 via email

01/20/2015: Visa Received

03/15/2015: POE

04/01/2015: Married!! (L)

04/11/2015: Submitted AOS / EAD / AP

10/09/2015: Green Card Approved

07/20/2017: Submitted I-751 ROC

07/27/2017: NOA1 Received

10/14/2017: Biometrics Waived

10/27/2018: ROC Approved

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: IR-1/CR-1 Visa Country: Canada
Timeline

Well I filed in July for the cr1 visa in July. When I tried to cross the border I was told that I could no longer cross. They gave me a parole for 7 days and told me I was lucky they had waived the fee. Then they said "when you come back u need another parole" this after saying can't come back till green card in hand....when I got to u.s. side the guard there was confused as to why I had a parole card! When I crossed back into Canada the Canadian guard rolled her eyes Nd said "those people" are nuts over there! So, wanting to cross but scared. Maybe best to offer the triples to Canada stuff? The border guard had refused to even look at them and instead said if you have applied for visa you are no longer a visitor.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: Scotland
Timeline

Just sharing fiance's experience as he flew in from Scotland to JFK last week and went through the POE in Dublin, Ireland.

We picked the later connecting flight (about an hour longer layover) just incase he was pulled aside and he had on hand a notice from his work as to when he was expected back, a copy of our NOA1, and copies of upcoming bills he had as proof of ties.

Dublin is a U.S. customs POE so he went through immigration over there and not at JFK, and he is staying with me for about 2 months.

His story is -

Rory went up to the agent and was asked the usual "why are you here?". He answered that he is visiting his fiancee, to which the agent scanned his passport and sat in silence for about a minute. Rory was then asked to come to the secondary room, where he was questioned further.

They grilled him on why he was coming so long, to which his answer was along the lines of "why not try and spend the most time with my fiancee" and the agent asked "I assume you put in your k1 paperwork?" Now, Rory didn't mention that or showed him the NOA1 so I'm not sure if the minute or so of staring at his screen might have showed something was in process under his name.

He was asked when we filed, which was the end of May, and then told Rory that he was lucky because if it was any earlier he would have been sent back home. Apparently the agent said there was another man coming from France who was called up before Rory who filed in February and was turned back around.

He was not asked to show any ties, just grilled with questions.

The agent then gave a warning saying if he was approved while he was here, he would have to go back, which I am pretty sure is a lie, but after Rory saying he was so nervous, red, and felt like his heart was going to burst out of his chest, he made it safely and we have been enjoying out time in NYC until he leaves late September! :)

NOA1: May 27th, 2014 - TSC

ARN: August 8th, 2014

NO transfer....

NOA2: November 10th, 2014!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: United Kingdom
Timeline

So, my fiance is from the UK. We filed in early April and are waiting for our K-visa approval. He arrived to visit me at the end of June and is still here (in mid-august - though he will go back to UK this week). At the entry point, he told them he was coming to visit me as well as friends. They asked if he intended to marry and he said "Not on this trip!" He was admitted with no problems. He even took a small trip inside the US by plane during this vacation didn't have any trouble on that trip either. So it worked out for us, and we have had a nice long visit during the waiting process (which we hope will not be much longer, since we received a transfer of case notice today and most of those reach approval within a month or so).

Edited by elettarias

I-129F sent:04/01/2014

Package Accepted:04/14/2014

NOA1(EMail & Text):04/17/2014

Hardcopy Received(Mail):04/20/2014

Case Transferred: 08/11/2014, again 8/19/2014

Case Transferred: 09/13/2014

RFE Received: 9/19 email & text, post 9/22
RFE Returned: 9/24, rec'd by USCIS 9/26

NOA2(Email&Text): 10/06/2014

NOA2(Hardcopy Received): 10/09/2014

NVC Arrived:

NVC Left:

Medical Date:

Packet 3 Received:

Packet 3 Faxed or emailed:

Packet 4 Received:

Packet 4 Faxed or Emailed:

Interview(Approved):

Visa in Hand:

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi, CR-1 filer here but thought I would post my experience to calm people's nerves.

I flew from London Heathrow to Cleveland Hopkins and my POE was Newark.

I was greeted by an empty immigration hall and the conversation was like this:

Her: *takes passport and customs form, then starts looking at the customs form* could I have your passport?
Me: ...you've got it already

Her: Oh yeah lololol *scans it then tells me to do the fingerprints and camera shot* So what is the purpose of your visit today?

Me: I'm going to be visiting my family today

Her: Oh, it's a family visit? Which family members?

Me: My husband and my in-laws

Her: Your husband! How come he lives here and you live in the UK?

Me: Well, he was born here and I was born there :P

Her: Well, you should move here!

Me: We're in the process of it

Her: Oh, getting your Green Card?
Me: Yeah, we're at the NVC stage

Her: huh, ok *stamps me in* have a nice day!

Me: You too! *walks off in disbelief that I discussed my immigrant intent and still got in xD*

I recommend Newark. I've flown through there the last four times I've visited and have never had any trouble with the officers. Most of the time you can even pick which desk to line up at (if it's not busy - so I suggest fast walking from your plane), which is how I ended up with the nice chatty woman above. If anything, her whole demeanour made me think she wanted me to stay in the country, not that I will be! I think she just felt sorry for me :P

Edited by Ketsuban

ROC from CR-1 visa (Green Card expiration date was Nov 24th 2016)

 

Link to the evidence I submitted. Be sure to send evidence spanning your entire marriage (especially for K-1) or as far back as you can. Just one or two bank statements will not cut it. I primarily focused on the two years of living here since I came in on a CR-1. If you don't have the fundamentals (i.e. joint accounts/policies), you can explain why in the covering letter. E.g. "While we do not have joint utilities, we both contribute to them from our joint bank account".

 

September 26th 2016: I-751 package sent to CSC

September 28th 2016: Package delivered
September 30th 2016: Check cashed
October 3rd 2016: NOA1 received with receipt date of 09/28/16
November 3rd 2016: Biometrics received with appointment date of 11/14/16.
November 14th 2016: Attended biometrics appointment
October 30th 2017: Infopass appointment to get I-551 stamp
February 26th 2018: I-751 case number (aka the NOA1 receipt number) becomes trackable
March 14th 2018: Submitted service request due to being outside of processing time.

March 15th 2018: ROC approved. 535 days (1 year, 5 months and 17 days)

March 29th 2018: Card being produced

April 4th 2018: Card mailed out

April 6th 2018: Card in hand. Has incorrect "resident since" date. Submitted service request on I-751 case (typographical error on permanent resident card) and an I-90 online.

April 2018 - August 7th 2018: Tons of service requests, emails and now senator involvement to get my corrected green card back because what the heck, USCIS. Also some time in May I sent a letter to Potomac telling them I want to withdraw my I-90 since CSC were handling it.

August 8th 2018: Card in production thanks to the direct involvement of Senator Sherrod Brown's team

August 13th 2018: Card mailed

August 15th 2018: Card in hand with correct date. :joy:

October 31st 2018: Potomac sends out a notice stating they have closed out my I-90 per my request. Yay for no duplicate card drama.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: New Zealand
Timeline

Hi everyone, I have a few questions...

We are in the process of waiting for our noa2, and we just got an RFE after 7 months of waiting. My fiancé who is from new zealand visited from march-june under the visa waiver. it has been 2 months since he has left and we are talking about him possibly coming back here while everything else finishes for the k-1 and then we both go back to nz for his medical and interview.

The questions are, 1) has anyone traveled to the states under a visa waiver, twice, in a short period of time? 2) And will they care if we do the rest of the forms and the remainder of the process while he is in the states and we go back to nz shortly before the medical and interview?

thanks to anyone who can help!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi everyone, I have a few questions...

We are in the process of waiting for our noa2, and we just got an RFE after 7 months of waiting. My fiancé who is from new zealand visited from march-june under the visa waiver. it has been 2 months since he has left and we are talking about him possibly coming back here while everything else finishes for the k-1 and then we both go back to nz for his medical and interview.

The questions are, 1) has anyone traveled to the states under a visa waiver, twice, in a short period of time? 2) And will they care if we do the rest of the forms and the remainder of the process while he is in the states and we go back to nz shortly before the medical and interview?

thanks to anyone who can help!

I travelled to the US with only short gaps between visits - 89 days in the US, 6 weeks back in the UK, 90 days in the US, 6 weeks in UK, 8 weeks in US. Not really recommended as you are supposed to spend more time OUT of the US than IN the US. I took plenty of proof of ties to the UK each time I flew - on my last trip in April 2013, those ties were getting quite tenuous. The only time I was ever asked for anything was on that last trip - I was asked for evidence of my return ticket which, naturally, I had with me.

I got my NOA2 whilst in the US on that trip and completed all the forms in the US and sent them to the US Embassy in London via FedEx (this was back in May 2013 - I think the process is different now). I flew back to the UK and had my medical the same day - not really recommended as my blood pressure was high. My interview was then 3 weeks later (my fiancé was also with me at the interview).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: New Zealand
Timeline

I travelled to the US with only short gaps between visits - 89 days in the US, 6 weeks back in the UK, 90 days in the US, 6 weeks in UK, 8 weeks in US. Not really recommended as you are supposed to spend more time OUT of the US than IN the US. I took plenty of proof of ties to the UK each time I flew - on my last trip in April 2013, those ties were getting quite tenuous. The only time I was ever asked for anything was on that last trip - I was asked for evidence of my return ticket which, naturally, I had with me.

I got my NOA2 whilst in the US on that trip and completed all the forms in the US and sent them to the US Embassy in London via FedEx (this was back in May 2013 - I think the process is different now). I flew back to the UK and had my medical the same day - not really recommended as my blood pressure was high. My interview was then 3 weeks later (my fiancé was also with me at the interview).

Thanks, that was very helpful! Did you take your birth certificate with you and everything else you had to send in? Do you remember if you brought anything else to the states in preparation? Thats one thing I am worried about that he will need while he is here

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks, that was very helpful! Did you take your birth certificate with you and everything else you had to send in? Do you remember if you brought anything else to the states in preparation? Thats one thing I am worried about that he will need while he is here

In the UK, we take the birth certificate, etc with us to the interview. It is only completed forms we send to the embassy. So I didn't take any of that with me to the US.

However, I did apply for the K1 visa from within the US. As I didn't want to be caught with my birth certificate, divorce papers in my luggage (they may consider that I was going to attempt to AOS from within the US), I actually mailed it all to my fiancé.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: New Zealand
Timeline

In the UK, we take the birth certificate, etc with us to the interview. It is only completed forms we send to the embassy. So I didn't take any of that with me to the US.

However, I did apply for the K1 visa from within the US. As I didn't want to be caught with my birth certificate, divorce papers in my luggage (they may consider that I was going to attempt to AOS from within the US), I actually mailed it all to my fiancé.

sorry to be such a pain, but what did you do if/when they asked about a job? or ties to the uk?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Filed: K-1 Visa Country: England
Timeline

Has anyone had an experience of being denied entry on a tourist visa while waiting for K1 approval? My fiance is wanting to visit in October and I am so worried he will not be allowed entry!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just thought I'd share my experience with traveling after submitting the K1 petition...

We got our NOA1 on July 29, and my departure date was August 18, to stay for 88 days on VWP. My POE was Minneapolis St. Paul, and I was prepared for just about anything - I had tons of documentation, and had arranged for a 5 hour layover just in case. I got to the immigration officer's desk, and he asked me just a few questions: How long are you staying, why are you here for so long, what's his name, what does he do, what do you do at home. That was it.

As I was doing my fingerprints and he was stamping my passport, he asked me when the big day was, and I told him we couldn't set one yet as we were waiting for the correct visa. He smiled at me and said yeah, that can be a long wait, and told me if I have any questions about the visa process I could talk to someone from his department. Then he made a joke about a specific kind of Norwegian food (lutefisk) and sent me on my way. :)

Thankfully I didn't have to wait the full 5 hours for my next flight, as I was lucky enough to get a standby seat on an earlier flight. All in all the best travel experience I've had!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 
Didn't find the answer you were looking for? Ask our VJ Immigration Lawyers.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
- Back to Top -

Important Disclaimer: Please read carefully the Visajourney.com Terms of Service. If you do not agree to the Terms of Service you should not access or view any page (including this page) on VisaJourney.com. Answers and comments provided on Visajourney.com Forums are general information, and are not intended to substitute for informed professional medical, psychiatric, psychological, tax, legal, investment, accounting, or other professional advice. Visajourney.com does not endorse, and expressly disclaims liability for any product, manufacturer, distributor, service or service provider mentioned or any opinion expressed in answers or comments. VisaJourney.com does not condone immigration fraud in any way, shape or manner. VisaJourney.com recommends that if any member or user knows directly of someone involved in fraudulent or illegal activity, that they report such activity directly to the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement. You can contact ICE via email at Immigration.Reply@dhs.gov or you can telephone ICE at 1-866-347-2423. All reported threads/posts containing reference to immigration fraud or illegal activities will be removed from this board. If you feel that you have found inappropriate content, please let us know by contacting us here with a url link to that content. Thank you.
×
×
  • Create New...